I’ll be honest. I just read this article and it’s left me full of feels. I’m not nearly as eloquent as Kameron Hurley,
but I want to write it out and this is my space, anyway.
I am a small person who has spent a lot of time trying to
become smaller. I learned early on that lashing out gets me nowhere, so I
crumple inward instead. I’m a trick of folded paper, working my way down with
the ambition of being microscopic.
I shove myself into corners, lockers, pockets. Some people
are devastated because others make them small, but I made myself a point charge
with no mass, hovering hopelessly in the empty space I left behind me.
I don’t know why. Maybe I was afraid. Maybe I didn’t deserve
all that space others seemed to so easily occupy. Maybe I just give in, like
it’s my super power. Some super heroes are stone walls standing against the
tidal wave, but I am cotton and snow and sand. I am packed down, packed away,
forgotten at the bottoms of shoes.
I am contrary and unpleasant and I duck before you even
raise a fist. Because I am afraid. Because I don’t understand the space I
occupy in the world and how I’m supposed to decorate it with sparkly pink stars
and scrub it clean with suds. Because I forget which part is me and which part
is dirt and kick over the wrong bucket.
I’m not even sure what this has to do with that article
anymore. I meant to write something about the nature of reality, about how I
approach the world as a writer and fight against the cliché. About how when I
feel things I don’t accept the easy description. How does this fear make you feel? And
don’t say your heart is in your throat because it isn’t, that’s a thing you
read, that’s a lie, how do you really feel?
And I know that fear makes me feel like glass, not the sturdy plastic kind, but the kind that ipod screens are made of, the kind that shatters from a three-inch fall. Fear is light and too much air. Fear is
tectonic plates moving, ripping me apart.
Fear is wanting to delete this entire thing instead of
posting it.
We are told, endlessly, to write what we are most
afraid of. And we are not told what to do when we are just too afraid.
I don’t want anyone reading my
words. I want to keep them small and in my head. I don't want anyone trying to pull me out and stretch my taffy flesh. And I know I need to, but it's painful and I'm none too fond of pain.
So I wrote this because I needed to explain it to myself, and maybe I'll delete it and maybe I won't. I've deleted about five different endings because none of them seemed to work, and now if I don't get to sleep I'll never get up in time for work tomorrow, so here's my last go at it.
Be what you are. And never let anyone tell you you're actually a cannibalistic llama.
So I wrote this because I needed to explain it to myself, and maybe I'll delete it and maybe I won't. I've deleted about five different endings because none of them seemed to work, and now if I don't get to sleep I'll never get up in time for work tomorrow, so here's my last go at it.
Be what you are. And never let anyone tell you you're actually a cannibalistic llama.
2 comments:
That is a great article. Thanks for linking.
Fear is normal. It's a part of life. Fear of failure, fear of success, fear of being misunderstood.
If you try, you will fail, sometimes. If you say something, you will be misunderstood, sometimes. But if you never do either, you'll never succeed.
Failure, misunderstanding, success—all are a part of life.
So is fear.
That fear is normal. The only people I've ever met without it were "Yes" men of limited intelligence.
…I'm not sure if my response connects properly to either article. >_>
Thanks for the comment! I thought it tied in. It's very inspiring. :)
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